OJYDOIIIY Wall Mount Fishing Rod Holders,Vertical Fishing Pole Storage Rack Review
Our verdict
At $9.99 for a 6 rod vertical rack, the OJYDOIIIY holder is the cheapest rod storage option in this lineup and still pulls a 4.6 star average across 1,090 reviews, with 2,000+ bought last month, the strongest demand signal of any rack compared here.
Check price on AmazonBest for
Anglers who need to get a half dozen rods off the garage floor or out of a truck bed without spending real money, and who are fine mounting a rubber-holder rack to a wall stud rather than needing a freestanding cabinet.
Skip if
Skip this if you want a rack that also displays rods like furniture, or if you are storing heavier surf or boat rods where a metal frame like the Rush 40-0001 offers more structural backing per rod.
- Material Rubber
- Color 1 Pack, 6 Rods
- Pieces 1.0 Count
- Feature Hardware
- Priced 55% below the category median ($21.99 across 45 tracked models)
Our scorecard
-
Owner rating4.6/5
4.6 average across 1,090 owner ratings
-
Popularity3.8/5
1,090 owner reviews, more than most models here
The overall score is owner satisfaction weighted by how many reviews back it, so a high rating from few reviews counts for less. The bars below show where this model stands against the other fishing gear and tackle we track in this category on price, popularity and size. Context, not marks against it, and our read of the data, not a lab test.
Overview
The OJYDOIIIY is a wall mounted rod rack built for anglers who just need their rods held vertically and out of the way. It ships as a single 1 pack unit rated for 6 rods, made from rubber, with the hardware included for mounting straight to a wall or stud.
Compared to the other racks here, price is where this one separates itself. At $9.99 it undercuts the Seachoice 89501 ($13.08), the Berkley BRMTL class of racks, the HiUmi ($17.99), and the Rush 40-0001 ($57.99) by a wide margin, while still holding double the rod count of most of those pairs and 3-rod units. That combination of low cost and higher per-unit rod capacity is likely why it shows the highest bought-last-month figure in this set at 2,000+.
The review numbers back up that it is not a corner-cutting purchase either. A 4.6 star average across 1,090 reviews sits ahead of the Seachoice (4.5 across 2,053) and matches the HiUmi (4.6 across 2,000), even though those two carry more total reviews from being on the market longer or selling in more channels. For a budget rack, that rating consistency across over a thousand buyers is a solid signal.
Pros
- Lowest price in the comparison at $9.99, undercutting the next closest rack by roughly $3
- Holds 6 rods per unit, double what most 1 pack or 3-rod competitors offer
- 4.6 star rating across 1,090 reviews, on par with the pricier HiUmi rack
- 2,000+ bought last month, the highest demand figure of any rod rack compared here
- Mounting hardware included, so no separate purchase needed for wall installation
- Rubber construction is a lighter-duty material that keeps the price down without a metal frame
Cons
- Rubber build is not rated for heavier weight per rod the way steel or wood-and-metal racks are
- Wall mount only, no freestanding or ceiling option listed in the specs
- No weight spec provided, unlike the Seachoice and HiUmi listings
- Single color and configuration option, less choice than multi-variant competitors
Specifications
| Material | Rubber |
|---|---|
| Color | 1 Pack, 6 Rods |
| Pieces | 1.0 Count |
| Feature | Hardware |
Performance notes
The core spec that matters here is capacity versus material. A 6 rod rack made of rubber is designed to cradle rods, not clamp them under heavy load, which is a fine tradeoff for garage or shed storage where rods sit vertically between trips. The included hardware means installation is a matter of finding studs and mounting, without needing to source separate screws or brackets. Against the Rush 40-0001, which uses engineered wood and metal and weighs 16.5 pounds on its own, the OJYDOIIIY is clearly built for lighter duty and lower cost rather than as a furniture-grade rack. For anglers with spinning and casting rods in the typical weight range, that distinction should not matter much, but it is worth knowing this is not a heavy-tackle or surf-rod solution based on the materials listed.
What buyers say
A 4.6 star average holding steady across 1,090 reviews suggests this rack does what it claims for most buyers without a pattern of returns or complaints dragging the score down. What stands out most is the 2,000+ bought last month figure, which is well ahead of every other rack in this comparison, including ones with more total lifetime reviews. That gap between review count and recent purchase volume points to a product that is currently trending, likely driven by its low price point relative to the rod capacity it offers. Combined with a rating that matches or beats costlier alternatives, the pattern reads as a rack that continues to satisfy buyers even as sales volume climbs.
Similar fishing gear and tackle to consider
- PLUSINNO$19.565,000+ bought last monthView on Amazon
- POKIPO
POKIPO Fishing Rod Holders for Garage,Fishing Rod Rack Storage up
$42.49400+ bought last monthView on Amazon
Featured in
Frequently asked questions
How many rods does the OJYDOIIIY rack hold?
The listing specifies a 1 pack configuration rated for 6 rods, making it a higher per-unit capacity option compared to several 3-rod or single-rod racks in this comparison at a similar or lower price.
Does it come with mounting hardware?
Yes, the feature spec lists hardware as included, so you should not need to buy separate screws or wall anchors to complete a standard wall mount installation, assuming you are mounting into studs or solid material.
Is this rack a good fit for heavy saltwater or surf rods?
Based on the rubber construction listed, this rack looks better suited to lighter freshwater and general-purpose rods than to heavy surf setups. For heavier gear, a metal or wood-and-metal rack like the Rush 40-0001 lists more substantial materials.